POWER TRANSFORMER SERIES IMPEDANCE AND REGULATION BASIC AND TUTORIALS


The series impedance of a transformer consists of a resistance that accounts for the load losses and a reactance that represents the leakage reactance. This impedance has a very low power factor, consisting almost entirely of leakage reactance with only a small resistance.

As discussed earlier, the transformer design engineer can control the leakage reactance by varying the spacing between the windings. Increasing the spacing ‘‘decouples’’ the windings and allows more leakage flux to circulate between the windings, increasing the leakage reactance.

While leakage reactance can be considered a transformer loss because it consumes reactive power, some leakage reactance is necessary to limit fault currents. On the other hand, excessive leakage reactance can cause problems with regulation.

Regulation is often defined as the drop in secondary voltage when a load is applied, but regulation is more correctly defined as the increase in secondary output voltage when the load is removed. The reason that regulation is defined this way is that transformers are considered to be ‘‘fully loaded’’ when the secondary output voltage is at the rated secondary voltage.

This requires the primary voltage to be greater than the rated primary voltage at full load.

Let Ep equal the primary voltage and let Es equal the secondary voltage when the transformer is fully loaded. Using per-unit values instead of primary and secondary voltage values, the per-unit secondary voltage will equal Ep with the load removed. Therefore, the definition of regulation can be expressed by the following equations.


Regulation = (Ep - Es)/ Es


Since Es = 1 by definition,
Regulation Ep - 1 (3.8.2)
Regulation depends on the power factor of the load. For a near-unity power
factor, the regulation is much smaller than the regulation for an inductive load
with a small lagging power factor.

Example 3.4
A three-phase 1500 KVA 12470Y-208Y transformer has a 4.7% impedance. Calculate the three-phase fault current at the secondary output with the primary connected to a 12,470 V infinite bus. Calculate the regulation for a power factor of 90% at full load.

The three-phase fault is a balanced fault, so the positive-sequence equivalent circuit applies. The full-load secondary current is calculated as follows:

I 1.732 500,000 VA per phase/208 V 4167 A per phase
The per-unit fault current is the primary voltage divided by the series impedance:
1/0.047 = 21.27 per unit

The secondary fault current is equal to the per-unit fault current times the fullload current:
If 21.27 per unit 4167 A per phase 88,632 A per phase To calculate regulation, the secondary voltage is 1∠0° per unit by definition.

Applying a 1 per unit load at a 90% lagging power factor, I 1.0∠ 25.8°. Since the series impedance is mainly inductive, the primary voltage at full load Ep can be calculated as follows:

Ep 1∠0° + 1.0∠ 25.8° X 0.047∠90°
1.02 + j0.042 = 1.021 per unit
Regulation = Ep - 1 = 0.021 = 2.1%


ON LOAD TAP CHANGER DESIGN TEST FOR MOTOR DRIVEN MECHANISM BASIC INFORMATION


Mechanical load test
If the LTC is operated by a separate motor-drive mechanism, the output shaft shall be loaded by the largest LTC for which it is designed or by an equivalent simulated load.

At such a load, 500 000 operations shall be performed at room temperature across the entire tap range. Additional cooling of the motor-drive is permissible during this test.

During this test, 10 000 operations shall be performed with the motor supply voltage at 85% of rated drive motor voltage. Also, 10 000 operations shall be performed at 110% of rated drive motor voltage. In addition, 100 operations shall be performed at a temperature of -25 °C.

The correct functioning of the tap position indicator, limit switches, restarting device, and operation counter shall be verified during this test. At the completion of this test, the LTC shall be operated manually, if applicable, through one cycle of operation.

The test shall be considered to be successful if there is no mechanical failure or any undue wear of the mechanical parts. Normal servicing according to the manufacturer's instruction book is permitted during the test. During this test, the heating system of the motor-drive mechanism shall be switched off.

Overrun test
It shall be demonstrated that, in the event of a failure of the electrical limit switches, the mechanical end stops will prevent operation beyond the end positions when a motorized tap-change is performed and that the motor-drive mechanism will not suffer either electrical or mechanical damage.

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